advertisement

Heartbreak for Hansen

OMAHA, Neb. - Brendan Hansen clung to the lane rope, glaring at the scoreboard. No matter how long he stared, the shocking result just wouldn't go away.

He wasn't first - or even second.

He won't be swimming one of his signature events at the Beijing Olympics.

In the first major stunner of the U.S. swimming trials, Hansen failed to make the Olympic team in the 200-meter breaststroke Thursday night. The world recordholder less than a month ago was knocked out by a fourth-place showing, laboring to the finish in the wake of three countrymen.

Hansen's only solace: He still has a spot in the 100 breast and, most likely, the 400 medley relay.

It was of little comfort on this night.

"I did my best," said Hansen, the last of the eight finalists to leave the pool deck. "I gave everything in the pool tonight. I left it all out there. It just wasn't there. It wasn't my day."

Hansen wasn't the only big name to falter on the fifth night of the meet, which failed to produce a world record for the second straight night. Six were set over the first three days.

Katie Hoff, who already had qualified for four individual events and one relay, failed to advance out of the semifinals of the 100 freestyle, denying her a chance to go for as many as eight medals in Beijing.

But Hoff's 11th-best time against a field that included Natalie Coughlin and 41-year-old Dara Torres wasn't that surprising - the 100 was by far the longest shot on the 19-year-old's grueling program.

Hansen, on the other hand, has long been this country's top breaststroker, and the crowd gasped when he touched the wall behind three others.

He led the first 150 meters, only to fade badly on the final lap as Scott Spann - a Hansen training partner - powered to the biggest win of his career. Eric Shanteau, who also trains with Hansen, was second.

"I came to the pool tonight and didn't have a very good feeling about warm-up and just everything in general," Hansen said. "I might have been worrying too much about what I needed to do to get this done and didn't worry about the guys that were gunning after me at the same time."

Elaine Breeden won the 200 butterfly in 2:06.75, ahead of Kathleen Hersey. Breeden also will swim the 100 fly in Beijing after taking second in that event Monday. Rosary product Mary Descenza placed fourth in the 200 in 2:09.23 in what was her best opportunity to make the U.S. Olympic team.

Three-time Olympian Amanda Beard emerged as a solid contender in the 200 breaststroke, her last chance for No. 4. She was second in the semifinals, more than two seconds behind leader Rebecca Soni but well aware that only takes second to get to Beijing.

Article Comments
Guidelines: Keep it civil and on topic; no profanity, vulgarity, slurs or personal attacks. People who harass others or joke about tragedies will be blocked. If a comment violates these standards or our terms of service, click the "flag" link in the lower-right corner of the comment box. To find our more, read our FAQ.